Hindustan Times (Patiala)

HEARING IN UK TRIBUNAL ON SECRET OPERATION BLUESTAR FILES BEGINS TOMORROW

ALLEGED AID In 2014, declassifi­ed govt documents revealed British military advice given to Indian forces before the operation

- Press trust of India letterschd@hindustant­imes.com n

LONDON: A British tribunal will rule on a freedom of informatio­n (FOI) request for classified UK cabinet office files that are believed to hold informatio­n on Britain’s involvemen­t in Operation Bluestar in 1984.

A three-day hearing of the first tier tribunal (informatio­n rights) will open in London on Tuesday to determine if the UK’s informatio­n commission­er was right to uphold a cabinet office decision not to allow the files being made public.

The appeal is being handled by KRW Law on behalf of freelance journalist Phil Miller, who has been investigat­ing the exact nature of the then Margaret Thatcher-led government’s assistance to the Indian Army operation on Golden Temple in Amritsar.

“The FOI request should be granted because there is overwhelmi­ng public interest in understand­ing the extent of UK involvemen­t in the tragic events of 1984. Disclosing documents from three decades ago will not harm diplomatic relations – politician­s in the UK and India have embraced right to informatio­n laws and recognise the importance of public access to national archives,” Miller told PTI.

In 2014, the UK government documents declassifi­ed under the 30-year rule to make such material public had revealed that British military advice was given to Indian forces prior to Operation Bluestar.

The then British Prime Minister, David Cameron, had ordered a review into this discovery, which led to a statement in Parliament declaring that Britain’s role had been purely “advisory” and the special air service (SAS) advice had “limited impact”.

‘MANY DOCUMENTS REMAIN CLASSIFIED’

But Miller, the author of “Sacrificin­g Sikhs: The need for an investigat­ion” report released last year, says many documents from the incident remain classified and only “full transparen­cy” would reveal the exact nature of Britain’s involvemen­t.

“A public inquiry would allow us to understand how much Margaret Thatcher’s decision to send a military adviser to Amritsar in 1984 was motivated by trade and arms deals worth billions of pounds. It would also establish whether the UK military advice was really a one off or whether in fact it continued throughout the period, even after the tragic events of June 1984,” he said.

The tribunal next week will hear evidence from senior civil servants from the UK’s foreign and commonweal­th office (FCO) and assess evidence in closed session in addition to hearing arguments from all sides to determine whether the documents can be declassifi­ed.

The UK cabinet office has declined to release the files on the grounds of national security and safeguardi­ng internatio­nal relations with India.

The UK’s informatio­n commission­er, who was referred the case in August 2015, supported the Cabinet Office position.

An appeal over that decision was lodged in September 2016 and was to be heard in April last year, but was delayed and will now begin on March 6.

The Opposition Labour Party has backed some British Sikh groups in their call for an independen­t public inquiry into Britain’s links with the then Indira Gandhi-led government in the lead up to the Indian Army’s operation on the Sikh holy shrine in June 1984.

CORBYN HAD CALLED FOR AN INQUIRY

Last year, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn wrote to Prime Minister Theresa May, calling for an independen­t inquiry and his party has since included the issue as an election pledge in its manifesto for the June 2017 general election.

“There has been a massive cover-up and Parliament and the public have been disturbing­ly misled. An independen­t public inquiry to get to the truth is the only way forward,” said Bhai Amrik Singh, chair of the Sikh Federation (UK), which has been campaignin­g for an inquiry.

It is supported by the All Party Parliament­ary Group (APPG) on British Sikhs, chaired by Labour MP Preet Kaur Gill.

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